When I lived in the UAE, we had speed cameras, but very few red light cameras (actually every red light had a camera, but very few issued tickets). The technology used there is sound. In five years there I never heard of anybody with a legitimate complaint about being tagged unjustly.
Everybody knew what the speed limit was, and everybody knew the cameras were there. Anybody who got tagged wasn't paying a fine, they were making a donation because they either weren't paying attention (bad at speed), or they were stupid. We called them "volunteers."
Instead of bragging about how fast they were driving, people were actually embarrassed when they got "flashed - (the light going off on the camera indicating it got you) because it was a stupid mistake. Imagine that - people being embarrassed about breaking a law.
Enforcement was simple and logical. Registration of the vehicle is a privilege. If you want to put that vehicle on the road, the you take responsibility for what it does on the road. All tickets must be paid to register it for the next year. If you owned the vehicle, you take responsibility for it because you are in the best position to keep it below the speed limit or stop allowing others to exceed it.
It was kinda hard to find the injustice in that approach.
I can follow this but it is in contrast to what we have seen in US jurisdictions (at least those around me).
Prior to installation of a redlight camera, a given intersection gives a 5-6 second yellow warning on its way to red. Concurrent with camera installation, the duration of the yellow is changed to 4 seconds. If 5-6 seconds was a safe and reasonable duration BEFORE cameras, it should remain the same and not be shortened to generate more revenue.
A residential street (generally a residential through street) has a speed limit of 30 or 35 for years. Concurrent with camera installation, the speed limit is changed to 25 mph. If it was safe at 35 mph for the last decade, its difficult to believe any version that says 25 is the correct safe speed limit with a camera.
Its not hard to doubt whether justice or safety were factors in these decisions.
The guy(s) who bought Cerra Gordo want to turn it into an old west BnB.
Best rental vehicles show up when you fly in late and are only staying in town until the following morning. Next week in Idaho I'll probably end up with a '98 Taurus Wagon.
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Best rental vehicles show up when you fly in late and are only staying in town until the following morning. Next week in Idaho I'll probably end up with a '98 Taurus Wagon.
I can see you in the Taurus...
Nice score!
Since this is in the Random thread... PSA - If you are doing a personal rental that is not covered by your employer, ensure that you have good auto insurance, credit card primary or secondary insurance, or the rental car company insurance.
My wife went to Idaho this summer and took a rock to the windshield which required windshield replacement. She had declined the rental insurance as we thought we were well covered by our credit card... Yes and no. We found out that they had changed their policy to secondary, so, we needed to start with our auto insurance company. I called our auto insurance company only to find that we had missed adding glass breakage coverage when we switched to their company. Great... We are on the hook for the first $1,000 before insurance kicks in. And it could cost this much, and more, as newer cars have to have their vision systems calibrated after having the windshield replaced, and that could take some time. We would also be responsible for the down time on this rental.
1) This is not a horror story. Avis was awesome! $210 bucks for the repair of their rental car as it was a simple windshield replacement. Note that my wife stopped by Safelite and got a quote for replacement and turn-around time in case we had to go to battle.
2) When you damage a rental car, you need to contact them within the time specified in the contract (she did). Hey, they want to give you another car as they need to fix their car and you can't be driving around with a broken windshield. And now you have another car that you might damage... This could have easily turned into a horror story. And, I found a lot of them on the web while helping her to sort it out.
Well I just wasted 20 minutes or so...Jalopnik has an article to video of an off road test where Jeep loses to a Mercedes G class and a Toyota Land Cruiser.
https://jalopnik.com/watch-a-jeep-wrangler-lose-an-off-road-comparison-to-a-1837622157
For the longest time I had my router setup to block all traffic originating from pinterest.com. This helped keep my honey-do list to a minimum and protected me. I've decided though that bringatrailer.com is easily the most dangerous website ever, and that my wife visiting pinterest is tame compared to what might happen if I continue to browse bringatrailer.com.
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